{"id":37829,"date":"2018-10-31T11:32:00","date_gmt":"2018-10-31T19:32:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/community-members-gather-to-mourn-pittsburgh-shooting-victims\/"},"modified":"2018-10-31T11:32:00","modified_gmt":"2018-10-31T19:32:00","slug":"community-members-gather-to-mourn-pittsburgh-shooting-victims","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/community-members-gather-to-mourn-pittsburgh-shooting-victims\/","title":{"rendered":"Community members gather to mourn Pittsburgh shooting victims"},"content":{"rendered":"
Barb Sheinberg got a text message from her son Saturday morning that she didn’t understand at first.<\/p>\n
“Did anybody in our family go to Tree of Life?” her son, who lives in Boston, asked.<\/p>\n
“Why?” Sheinberg, who lives in Juneau, asked.<\/p>\n
“Because something bad happened,” he said.<\/p>\n
Sheinberg grew up in the Pittsburgh community of Squirrel Hill before eventually moving away in 1973. She ended up in Alaska in 1980 and has lived here ever since, but still goes back to her hometown regularly, she said.<\/p>\n
She didn’t grow up going there, but she knew many who went to Tree of Life Synagogue in Squirrel Hill, a temple that has been in headlines, hearts and minds since Saturday. That morning, a gunman entered Tree of Life and killed 11 people.<\/p>\n
Memorial ceremonies have taken place from coast to coast, and Juneau’s Congregation Sukkat Shalom synagogue held its ceremony Tuesday night. The building was packed with people, including Gov. Bill Walker and Lt. Gov. Valerie Nurr’araaluk Davidson.<\/p>\n
Sheinberg was grateful to see Walker and Davidson there, she said.<\/p>\n
“That’s a big statement,” Sheinberg said. “We really do all come together.”<\/p>\n
People of all ages and backgrounds were in attendance Tuesday, from members of the congregation to people who had never been there before. One of the youngest participants in the service was 17-year-old Alana Paul.<\/p>\n